Floyd R Turbo
Either busy or sleeping
Using two 180w multichips is even less work and looks more realistic.
One of the benefits of multichips over 2 or 3w chips is the lens quality. Large glass dome lenses provide even coverage, while cheap acrylic lenses used for "pegboard" arrays have hot spots in the centre with a fast drop off a few inches off centre. large dome lenses provide natural shimmer without disco effect and weird purple and yellow shadows. You can mount multichips higher up from the water surface to keep them free of salt creep and splashed.
LED arrays create a series of light beams that don't properly mix colours. You end up with a surplus of one spectrum in one area, and a deficit in another. You don't get the "beam me up Scotty" effect with multichips. Combining multiple colours in one chip is the best option. Using one blue, then one white fixture etc. always looks spotty and doesn't provide a homogenous mix of spectra even at high suspension levels.
Part of the aesthetic is personal preference. I've never liked the look of T5 lighting and find it to look clinical and artificial. Multichips replicate the look of metal halide and if done right, the sun. In addition to the quality light, it looks cleaner with one or two small pendents rather than a massive array looming over the tank.
The lower the wattage of each chip, the more efficient. A series of 1w lights is better than 3w so multichips are more efficient than arrays. Changing the multichip or lens is a quick and painless process, and the cost isn't even as much as a metal halide bulb.
I agree with Lassef, higher colour temperature is the way to go. The 7500 Cree chips cause cyanobacteria and slime algae and look too yellow. Corals tend to bleach or brown out due to excessive growth of zooxanthellae masking brighter pigments. You end up using a lot more blue chips to drown out the green light so efficiency is diminished. With high kelvin white chips, you can run a 50:50 white:blue ratio, while 7500K whites require 25:75, thus lowering lumen/watt and PAR/watt.
Thanks Mr. Wilson, your description of the "beam me up scotty" effect and color separation is exactly what I wish to avoid.
I get the advantage of the larger multichips for simplicity, etc, but I have a 66 x 21 tank so it's long and narrow, and I feel that even with 30" of headroom I don't think I would get a decent spread, plus I really want to PWM dim then and I can't do that with a DIY driver on the 100/252W chips.
Here is my original post of the tank I wish to put these on for reference
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showpost.php?p=20502130&postcount=1332
also I'm not sure if I have to worry about getting a hotspot or what not.
With a mixture of 20W chips on individual heat sinks, I can replace or rearrange rather easily, and I can control them all to my heart's content. So that is the thing for me.
Next, I will have to figure out if I want to do lenses or not, and if I will be clustering them. I see the "scotty" effect coming into play maybe a little if I don't cluster them (versus an even on-center spacing)